CG Jung in 'Aion' wrote:As the highest value and supreme dominant in the psychic hierarchy, the God-image is immediately related to, or identical with, the self, and everything that happens to the God-image has an effect on the latter. An uncertainty about the God-image causes a profound uneasiness in the self, for which reason the question is generally ignored because of its painfulness. But that does not mean that it remains unmasked in the unconscious. What is more, it is answered by views and beliefs like materialism, atheism, and similar substitutes, which spread like epidemics. They crop up wherever and whenever one waits in vain for the legitimate answer. The ersatz product represses the real question into the unconscious and destroys the continuity of historical tradition which is the hallmark of civilization. The result is bewilderment and confusion. Christianity has insisted on God's goodness as a loving Father and has done its best to rob evil of its substance. The early Christian prophecy concerning the Antichrist, and certain ideas in late Jewish theology, could have suggested to us that the Christian answer to the problem of Job omits to mention the corollary, the sinister reality of which is now being demonstrated before our eyes by the splitting of our world: the destruction of the God-image is followed by annulment of the human personality. Materialistic atheism with its utopian chimeras forms the religion of all those rationalistic movements which delegate the freedom of personality to the masses and thereby extinguish it. The advocates of Christianity squander their energies in a mere preservation of what has come down to them, with no thought of building on to their house and making it roomier. Stagnation in these matters is threatened in the long run with a lethal end.
On another thread someone wrote:"Anyone, convince me that the 'philosophy of religion' is anything more than systematically listing the logical fallacies of creationists and spiritualists."
Someone else, responding, wrote:"Once we can figure out what philosophy, religion, and personal faith might and might not be, we might be able to make some sense of this topic."
There is no doubt in my mind that the topic broached in the present thread is deeply contended. I decided to reread Aion, since I had suggested it earlier as a way to understand this thing called 'Christianity' in the context of Mediterranean and European culture and everything that has occurred within that history, which---to be true to Jungianism---includes all of the darkest and most horrible, and condemnable, elements.
Just as in each of our lives when we reach a point of actually being able to see it and to take responsibility for it, our knowledge of it is never simple and never really easy: the lives we lead are twisted up with all sorts of errors and ambivalences; with our potential for what we understand as 'good' and what actually is expressed which is always a difficult and confusing admixture. Yet it really does seem to me that---to make a rather universalizing statement---we don't really know how to relate to the 'darker' side of our own personality and our self in this world, and as in the above-quoted sense "the question is generally ignored because of its painfulness". In a corresponding sense we do not know how to relate to the 'history of the self in the world', which is to say man as the creator---or possibly victim---of his own historical creations.
I am somewhat chary of the potential for reductionism or over-simplification in Jung's formulations, but it really does seem to me that as we lose or 'jettison' our link to God-images, the result of this does appear to be traces of the 'annulment of the personality'. Certainly Jung was speaking from a base in his medical/psychiatric context and making a broad application to the world (both a strength and a downfall of Jungianism). Yet it is something I personally notice, or believe I notice, in the world around me.
I am particularly interested in this idea in this context:
- "The advocates of Christianity squander their energies in a mere preservation of what has come down to them, with no thought of building on to their house and making it roomier. Stagnation in these matters is threatened in the long run with a lethal end."
I have spent a number of years now, in spare time, examining 'Christianity' and some part of that has been examining the various fundamentalist strains---the views and positions you might hear on Christian talk radio. I note there is something very *attractive* about fundamentalism of any sort, which obviously would include 'scientific fundamentalism' and 'scientism', or materialism, or atheism, and even especially the peculiar brand of (what I might call) 'acute secularism' which turns life and living into an on-going entertainment; a constant moving from one distraction, with varying dimensions of content, to other levels of distraction and entertainment; a movement within an essentially meaningless universe to which one has little real connection to anything, and mediated by media and entertainment enterprises in collusion with the State. Yet underneath it, though it is difficult to describe and is also subjective and non-quantifiable, there seems to operate a substantial angst; what might be called the 'unconscious underbelly', and which seems to have a corollary in *destructiveness*, but by agencies not directly connected to any given person, at least apparently. Still, something destructive occurs/is occurring: the 'annulment of the human personality'. Is this really happening? Is what I notice real or 'projected'?
There is a danger of 'reductionsim' and over-simplification in broaching these ideas, that much is clear. The 'religious impulse' is a complex thing even if it moves in 'progressive' territories. On one hand the true-believer fundamentalist is undoubtedly capable of identifying and holding to notions of Value (the common ones such as 'family values' which might only mean respect for 'the family' and respect in this sense for certain hierarchies of value, a problematic and contended subject), or certain substantial moral and ethical values which are so easily corroded and lost. Even and possibly definitely in the domain of definitions of sexual values the TB Christian has a certain advantage if only because an existent system is available, one that provides an order, that makes sense. But some part of this falls under 'preservation of what has come down to them' and not 'building on to their house and making it roomier'.
From what I have seen so far this 'Christianity' has a vast group of tools at its disposal, and by that I mean value-tools, idea-tools, forward-moving tools, energizing-tools, that are thoroughly worthy of preservation such that the evident destructiveness by ignorant persons who feel free to come onto the conflicted scene and take a shattering swipe at something
that they do not understand in any degree (a free-for-all in destructiveness that, in psychological terms, represents 'unconscious upwelling of anger and resentment' both for 'good' and for 'bad' reasons---ambivalence once again!), might be labeled as 'mere destructiveness' when
another attitude and stance is necessary. This is essentially my view.
I do have a strong feeling, a hunch of sorts but also more, that large groups of people in the post-war era *responded* to the necessity of broadening 'Christian' structures and potentials. Here I am speaking of my own experiences on the American scene in the Eighties and Nineties. There was no alternative, really, except to broaden 'Christianity' through incorporation of other 'models', such as Hindiusm, American Indian 'primitivism' and 'terrestrialism', shamanism, experimental psychology, body movement, alternative medicine, huge movements within human potential and also movements related simply to improving human communication (the ability to speak to one another). Obviously my 'context' is American, and America is indeed a culture utterly fused with religious strains (a nation of nutters in that sense!). As I reflect on it I have the strong sense that the core impetus that was functioning in us, when I think of those alternative times, was still within an essentially 'Christian' context because we are definite products of European civilization---'Mediterranean Christian culture'.
The issue of evil and the Devil is particularly relevant here. Increasing consciousness wherever it occurs can only become ever more aware of the fundamental conflict between 'spiritual' potential and 'material' realities; an agonizing yet creative conflict. One of Jung's interesting notions is that to become really aware of our condition, the tragedy and difficulty of life between the dual trauma of birth and death, is in one sense what the notion of the Crucified Christ is about: strung up between two 'thieves', strung between irreconcilable dualities, on a cross of awareness. His notion is that Westerners are placed in this problem in a unique sense, a more acute sense, which has produced the peculiar and notable Western intensity in all areas, but also the unresolvable tensions that such intensity/awareness produces. But according to Jung it is 'our condition' and our fate to resolve these tensions. Apparently, our consciousness is geared to make advances along these lines and in these specific areas and there is no turning back. There is effectively no way to simply disconnect from Christian history (if this is true). Hence the notion of 'Christ' as the 'ruling spirit' of the Aion (age), the prototype or archetype of potential and unfolding.
If true, this 'Christianity' is just as alive and possibly more so now than at any other time. Diarmaid MacCulloch's 'Christianity: The First Three Thousand Years' contains just in the title a statement about Christianity's presence and durability. So much hinges though on just
how broad it can be made. How real and relevant it can become. I suggest it is a fallacy to believe that 'Christianity' is being wiped away or superseded. But what is eliminated from the conscious domain submerges itself in an unconscious domain and when that happens all sorts of strange things happen. The reality or truth that cannot be faced squarely becomes the external situation that arises outside of the individual.
Rationally-driven mechanisms and technological systems to control human protoplasm? In essence is this not what we see forming? These are the outcomes of our *rational* choices? Indeed? The sheer annulment of the personality and subservience to mechanism. The diabolic wears a decidedly material costume. People note that religious institutions are mechanisms of control but how shall we place these newer 'secular' systems? Or do we chose simply to ignore it?
The comment:
- "Convince me that the 'philosophy of religion' is anything more than systematically listing the logical fallacies of creationists and spiritualists"
Is one that is based, apparently, in a definite
truth and so it
functions in thought. I guess that---and please excuse again the reference to Jung which may and also may not be valid or even useful as a category for decision-making---we have to ask ourselves just how much of 'our life' is really and truly *rational*, because if we start from
that assumption one is screwed right at the beginning, I think. Or perhaps it is more clearly stated that a life that is led in denial of man's essentially
irrational nature is a life doomed to failure and disaster?